Imaging japanese women as women as settlers in Manchuria in the 1930s and 1940s
Tipo de material: Recurso continuoSeries Género, lenguaje y traducción : actas del Primer Seminario Internacional sobre Género y Lenguaje (El género de la traducción-la traducción del género) : Valencia 16-18 octubre 2002 ; 1Detalles de publicación: Valencia : Universitat de ValènciaGeneralitat Valenciana. Conselleria de Benestar Social , 2003Descripción: p.55-68xxxii, 570 pISBN:- 84-370-5730-2
Tipo de ítem | Biblioteca actual | Colección | Signatura topográfica | Estado | Fecha de vencimiento | Código de barras | |
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Artículos/Analíticas | Biblioteca Bartolomé Mitre | Colección General | 81'25:141.72=134.2=111 S59 (Navegar estantería(Abre debajo)) | Disponible | 2278-27 |
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"The attention women received from the state was motivated by practical concerns. They were to be breeders of new generation of "continental Japanese" and serve as farm laborales. The mass media functioned as an inditect for recruiting young women to become settlers' wives. While the "Manchuria fever" created by journalism was escalating, the expression tairiku no hanayome (continental bride) acquired the status of a household word in the late 1930s. Marriage was the most unlikely matter of personal choice for Japanese womwn in those day. It was considered the only socially acceptable life for them. Most marriages werw arranged".
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